NEW YORK, June 4, 2026, 05:04 (EDT)
CrowdStrike Holdings shares fell in early premarket action Thursday even as the cybersecurity firm topped Wall Street’s quarterly numbers, upped its full-year forecast, and unveiled a four-for-one stock split. The report was solid but failed to impress investors at current high valuations.
The stock looked set to fall about 11% in premarket trading, quoted around $665 after closing Wednesday at $747.61. The regular Nasdaq session was not open yet. Nasdaq’s regular hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern, while premarket runs from 4:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. and can see lighter, choppier trade.
CrowdStrike has stood out as a top AI security play in the market, so this move drew attention. Investors focused not just on the quarter, but on how much future growth is priced into shares.
CrowdStrike (CRWD) posted first-quarter revenue of $1.39 billion, a 26% gain over last year. Adjusted earnings came in at $1.10 a share. Annual recurring revenue was $5.51 billion, up 24%, and net new ARR for the quarter hit a Q1 record $255.8 million.
The company raised its guidance for fiscal 2027, calling for revenue between $5.91 billion and $5.96 billion and adjusted earnings per share of $4.88 to $4.96. Adjusted, or non-GAAP, figures back out stock-based compensation and some acquisition and legal expenses.
CrowdStrike’s operating expenses jumped 15% to $1.07 billion in the quarter as it increased spending on AI and product development, Reuters said. The higher expenses showed up in the share response: strong sales, but also higher costs to keep up.
CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz described the company as “AI security infrastructure” and said the latest quarter marked an AI inflection point for CrowdStrike. CFO Burt Podbere said record free cash flow came in at $468 million and attributed the higher outlook to “continued strong retention.” CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.
CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said on the call that demand started to rise near the end of March as customers got more concerned about “shadow AI,” or AI tools being used in companies without proper security checks. Kurtz said customers were turning to CrowdStrike for help to secure these AI workloads. The Motley Fool
CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.’s board has signed off on a four-for-one stock split in the form of a stock dividend. Investors who are shareholders after the June 25 close will get three extra shares for every share they own after the July 1 close. Shares are set to trade on a split-adjusted basis starting July 2. The split drops the price per share but leaves the company’s overall market cap unchanged.
Cybersecurity shares have been trading weaker. Palo Alto Networks dropped after reporting stronger results, as some investors raised concerns about growth quality and recent acquisitions.
Tech stocks struggled as sentiment stayed weak. Wall Street ended lower Wednesday. The Nasdaq fell 0.89% as traders locked in gains near record levels and kept an eye on climbing oil prices and unrest in the Middle East.
But the risk is clear. If higher AI security spending doesn’t show up as big, repeat contracts, or if these costs squeeze margins further, CrowdStrike’s high valuation could slip more. The company also flagged risks around the July 19, 2024 Falcon sensor incident, product flaws, rivals, slow sales cycles, and softer macro conditions.
CrowdStrike delivered the numbers investors want—stronger recurring revenue, more cash, and a raised outlook. But the stock price looked for something beyond that.